Cabinet extends immigration, visa tracking system for another five years 

  • Union Cabinet (March 2026) approved continuation of Immigration, Visa, Foreigners Registration & Tracking (IVFRT) Scheme till 2031 with ₹1,800 crore outlay.
  • Decision follows enactment of Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025, requiring upgraded digital infrastructure for immigration control and foreigner management.
  • IVFRT aims to create an integrated digital platform linking visa issuance, immigration clearance, and foreigner registration, ensuring efficient, secure, and real-time monitoring system.
  • Focus on modernisation using emerging technologies, including faceless visa processing, biometrics, and automated immigration systems.

Relevance

  • GS III (Internal Security): Border management, illegal migration.
  • GS II (Governance): e-Governance, service delivery, digital state capacity.
  • GS III (Tech): AI, biometrics, surveillance systems.

Practice Questions

  • Q1. Digitalisation of immigration systems enhances both governance and security. Critically examine. (250 words)
  • IVFRT launched in 2010 with ₹1,011 crore outlay, initially targeting digitisation of immigration and visa processes.
  • Implemented by Ministry of Home Affairs, covering Immigration Check Posts (ICPs), FRROs (Foreigners Regional Registration Offices), and data centres.
  • Linked with e-Visa system, enabling online visa applications and digital approvals.
  • 100% faceless and contactless visa system with online application, payment, and appointment scheduling.
  • 91.24% e-Visas processed within 72 hours (last 5 years), significantly improving service efficiency.
  • Immigration clearance time reduced from 5–6 minutes to 2.53 minutes per passenger, including biometric verification.
1. Governance & Service Delivery
  • Integration of visa, immigration, and registration databases enables real-time tracking of foreigners, improving administrative coordination.
  • Introduction of mobile-based services and self-service kiosks enhances ease of travel and reduces human interface.
2. Internal Security Dimension
  • Strengthens monitoring of illegal migration, visa overstays, and human trafficking networks, critical in context of border management challenges.
  • Integration with intelligence databases enables risk profiling and early threat detection.
3. Technology & Digital Infrastructure
  • Adoption of biometrics, AI-based analytics, and automated clearance systems improves accuracy and reduces fraud.
  • Expansion of data centres and infrastructure ensures scalability and resilience of immigration systems.
4. Economic / Global Mobility Impact
  • Faster visa processing and seamless entry improve ease of doing business, tourism, and global mobility flows.
  • Supports India’s positioning as a global hub for trade, services, and investment.
  • Risks related to data privacy and surveillance, especially with large-scale biometric and personal data collection.
  • Need for cybersecurity safeguards to protect sensitive immigration databases from breaches.
  • Coordination challenges across multiple agencies (MHA, MEA, intelligence agencies) for seamless implementation.
  • Strengthen data protection frameworks (aligned with DPDP Act, 2023) to ensure privacy and accountability.
  • Enhance AI-driven risk assessment systems for better detection of illegal activities.
  • Improve inter-agency integration and real-time data sharing for holistic immigration governance.
  • Expand infrastructure at high-traffic immigration checkpoints to handle increasing passenger volumes.
  • IVFRT implemented by Ministry of Home Affairs, not MEA.
  • Covers visa issuance, immigration clearance, and foreigner registration.
  • Introduced faceless e-Visa system with biometric integration.

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